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Masters of a craft : Philadelphia's Black Public Waiters, 1820-50

https://collections.lancasterhistory.org/en/permalink/lhdo21552
Author
Pilgrim, Danya M.
Date of Publication
2018.
Call Number
905.748 HSP v.142
Responsibility
by Danya M. Pilgrim.
Author
Pilgrim, Danya M.
Place of Publication
Philadelphia, Pa
Publisher
University of Pennsylvania Press,
Date of Publication
2018.
Physical Description
269-293 p. ; 23 cm.
Series
Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography ; v. 142, no. 3
Summary
Abstract: This essay surveys the work of black public waiters in nineteenth-century Philadelphia and considers how they transformed menial domestic jobs into lucrative businesses. The work of public waiters in this era helped develop a catering trade for which the city became wellknown. Sources such as print culture, financial records, censuses, and directories reveal a transitional period in which public waiters negotiated a new role. From the 1820s through the antebellum era, as public waiters developed entrepreneurial catering businesses, they also helped build the black community, effect social mobility, and change eating culture.
Subjects
African American business enterprises - Pennsylvania - Philadelphia County.
Philadelphia (Pa.) - History - 19th century.
Location
Lancaster History Library - Book
Call Number
905.748 HSP v.142
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